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Accept reality of Taliban, NATO told
LONDON—Senior Pakistani officials are urging Nato countries to accept
the Taliban and work towards a new coalition government in Kabul that
might exclude the Afghan president Hamid Karzai. Pakistan’s foreign
minister, Khurshid Kasuri, has said in private briefings to foreign
ministers of some Nato member states that the Taliban are winning the
war in Afghanistan and Nato is bound to fail. He has advised against
sending more troops, the Telegraph reported.
Western ministers have been stunned. “Kasuri is basically asking Nato to
surrender and to negotiate with the Taliban,” said one Western official
who met the minister recently. The remarks were made on the eve of
Nato’s critical summit in Latvia. Lt Gen David Richards, the British
general and Nato’s force commander in Afghanistan, and the Dutch
ambassador Daan Everts, its chief diplomat there, have spent five days
in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, urging the Pakistani military to do
more to reign in the Taliban. But they have received mixed messages.
Mr Karzai has long insisted that the Taliban sanctuaries and logistics
bases are in Pakistan while Gen James Jones, the Supreme Commander of
Nato, told the US Congress in September that the Taliban leadership is
headquartered in the Pakistani city of Quetta.
Lt Gen Ali Mohammed Jan Orakzai, governor of the volatile North West
Frontier Province has stated publicly that the US, Britain and Nato have
already failed in Afghanistan. “Either it is a lack of understanding or
it is a lack of courage to admit their failures,” he said recently. Gen
Orakzai insists that the Taliban represent the Pashtun population,
Afghanistan’s largest and Pakistan’s second largest ethnic group, and
they now lead a “national resistance” movement to throw out Western
occupation forces, just as there is in Iraq.
But his comments have deeply angered many Pakistani and Afghan Pashtuns,
who consider the Taliban as pariahs and a negation of Pashtun values.
Gen Orakzai is the mastermind of “peace deals” between the army and the
heavily Talibanised Pashtun tribes on the Pakistani side of the border,
but these agreements have failed because they continue to allow the
Taliban to attack Nato forces inside Afghanistan and leave the Taliban
in place, free to run a mini-Islamic state.
Gen Orakzai is expected to urge the British Army to strike similar deals
in Helmand province. Meanwhile aides to President Pervez Musharraf say
he has virtually “given up” on Mr Karzai and is awaiting a change of
face in Kabul before he offers more help. Many Afghans fear that
Pakistan is deliberately trying to undermine Mr Karzai and Nato’s
commitment to his government in an attempt to reinstall its Taliban
proxies in Kabul – almost certainly leading to all-out civil war and
possible partition of the country.
To progress in Riga, Nato will have to enlist US support to call
Pakistan’s bluff, put pressure on Islamabad to hand over the Taliban
leadership and put more troops in to fight the insurgency while
persuading Mr Karzai to become more pro-active.—SANA |